Past their prime? Women actors of a certain age are having the time of their life

“And ladies,” she said accepting the Oscar for best actress “Don’t let anybody tell you you are ever past your prime. Never give up.”

Michelle Yeoh (Source: Getty images)

Michelle Yeoh, who will be 61 in August, had reason to celebrate many firsts. The first Asian to win an Oscar. Only the second woman of colour after Halle Berry in 2002, to take home the prize.

Dressed in white, which also happens to be the colour of the suffragettes, Yeoh did reference “all the little boys and girls who look like me watching tonight” before she delivered her knockout punch.

Yeoh has been bothered, and candid, in the past about the ageism that plagues her industry where the average age of best actress winners in the past century has been 37, reports The Insider. At the Golden Globes (where she also picked up best actress) she spoke about how discouraging it was to grow older in the industry: “As the days, years, numbers get bigger, the opportunities get smaller.”

Female characters anyway tend to be younger than their male counterparts, with their age diminishing in “alarming numbers” around the age of 40, found the report, It’s a Man’s (Celluloid) World. In 2022, women aged 40 and above found place in only 14% of movie roles.

That’s not about to change any time soon, but a quick look at recent Oscar winners is instructive: Frances McDormand won in 2018 and 2021 at 60 and 63. Olivia Colman was 45 at her 2019 win, Renee Zellweger 50 in 2020 and Jessica Chastain 44 last year.

[Read in NPR Michelle Yeoh called out sexism in Hollywood. Will it help close the gender gap?]

Their moment in the sun

In Everything Everywhere all at Once, Yeoh plays a middle-aged Chinese-American immigrant, trying to make her laundromat business, her marriage and her family work. To make matters worse, she must also face the world’s worst tax auditor, played brilliantly by Jamie Lee Curtis, 64 who picked up best supporting actress. Obviously.

Two women nominees who lost out include Angela Bassett and Cate Blanchett who are 64 and 53. Jennifer Coolidge who won outstanding performance by a female actor for her role in White Lotus earlier at the Screen Actors Guild award in February is 61.

What happens in Hollywood rarely stays in Hollywood. Accepting the Oscar for best documentary short, producer Guneet Monga pointed out that she and director Kartiki Gonsalves “were the only two women representing India…this is historic and a message for my fellow women”.

Sharmila Tagore’s return to cinema on March 3 with Gulmohar where she plays the role of the family matriarch who must deal with a bullying and out-of-date brother-in-law is tailor-made for her. A new generation of script writers, says film scholar Shohini Ghosh is using “women of all ages in all possible ways”.

In Pathaan, Dimple Kapadia plays a pivotal role as Shah Rukh Khan’s boss (though it must be said that at just eight years older, the casting does raise questions about ageism).

[Read the Bollywood Gender Age Gap here]

But it’s not just the playing of mom roles. “It’s the way women of a certain age are finding a range of creative expression that is most exciting,” says critic Pragya Tiwari. For instance, she points out, Neena Gupta’s spectacular second coming includes film roles, a TV series, an autobiography and becoming a fashion icon for her daughter Masaba’s brand. “She’s a full-on fashion icon with her daughter naming a blouse style, the Neenaji blouse, after her. All the young girls are wearing it,” says Tiwari.

New mediums

The growth of OTT platforms that provide the space for new content, new scripts and new avenues of creativity has certainly helped.

A Nekkei Asia data analysis of 1,200 Bollywood films over the past decades shows an upward trend in movies driven by women in the lead cast from one in 10 in the early 2000s to one in four today. The share of these movies on streaming platforms including Netflix, Amazon Prime and Disney Hotstar has shown a similar trend from just a trickle in 2018 to accounting for over half in 2022.

The expanded share is reflected in newer roles for such actors as Madhuri Dixit who made her acting debut in 1984 with Abodh and now continues to find meaty roles with the 2022 Netflix series The Fame Game. “It’s not just the OTT platforms that are providing new avenues of creativity but also social media where women can express themselves,” says film-maker Vinta Nanda whose new film Shout deals with gender-based violence.

Zeenat Aman at Lakme Fashion Week in Mumbai. (Source: PTI)

At 71, Zeenat Aman has made a smashing comeback on Instagram decades after retiring from films. Since her Insta debut on February 11, she has amassed 138,000 followers with her latest post, walking the ramp for designer Shahin Mannan at the Lakme Fashion Week.

Another post of Aman reading Derek Walcott’s Love after Love at her son Zahaan Khan’s recording studio received over 18,100 likes.

In a break from the political correctness that characterizes much of the film industry, Aman has spoken about gender pay parity (“so vast it was laughable”), the male gaze and the difference of being photographed by a woman and ageing. “As women we are told that our social worth lies in youth and physical beauty…as we age, men are bequeathed gravitas but women are at best offered sympathy.”

Ageism in general is not a movie problem as much as it is a social problem, points out Shohini Ghosh. “We live in a society that valourises youth and this is what is reflected in our cinema,” she says. So whether it is inequities of payment or the gender age gap, cinema won’t change until society changes.

In numbers

Only 18% of women in India have a say in how the money they earn on jobs is spent. While 67% overall said decisions on spending their money is made jointly with a spouse, 15% had absolutely no say in how their earnings were spent.

Source: National Family Health Survey data analysed by Mint.

Going places

Dhanya Rajendran (Source: thenewsminute)

Dhanya Rajendran, co-founder and editor-in-chief of news website The News Minute has been awarded the Chameli Devi Jain outstanding women media-person of 2022. “Rajendran’s reportage is an outstanding example of how good journalism can impact democracy,” Harish Khare, chair of the Media Foundation that administers the award said. The News Minute is credited with redefining news coverage from South India with Rajendran as the “curator of the country’s most diverse newsroom by way of caste, religion, gender, sexuality,” tweeted Sudipto Mondal, News Minute’s executive editor.

Seen and heard

“Shakha is an activity of men…male members have assemblies in early morning or late evening and participate in various activities.”

RSS general secretary Dattatreya Hosabale conceded that his organisation needed to engage with women but said they were limitations on they how much they can travel and so their work was accordingly structured.

Can’t make this up

“The father finds out, gets angry and beats up Kezia…At night, Kezia realises that her father works too hard to be playing with her and that explains him [sic] getting angry frequently. She forgives him and sleeps happily.”

The Delhi Commission for Child Protection Rights has been writing to NCERT since November 2022 about a problematic chapter in a class 9 text book, its chairperson Anurag Kundu told the Times of India. With a new academic session set to start in April, the chapter, which normalises and even justifies physical abuse, remains.

News you may have missed

The fight for marriage equality

(Image Source: Book cover of Ruth Vanita’s book ‘Love’s Rights’)

The central government has made clear its opposition to same-sex marriage, a stance that is backed by the RSS. The Supreme Court is scheduled to hear a batch of petitions demanding marriage rights for the LGBTQ community on April 18. Solicitor general Tushar Mehta through an affidavit filed in the apex court has said that extending marriage rights to the community will cause “havoc” but the petitioners say marriage confers substantive rights including adoption and inheritance that cannot be denied to them under the Constitution

Legal glossary to excise sexist terms from judgements

A committee chaired by Calcutta high court judge Moushumi Bhattacharya and including former high court judges Gita Mittal and Prabha Sridevan as well as professor Jhuma Sen are working on a legal glossary to stop the use of gendered language and terms by judges. Judgements are replete with words such as “concubine” and “thieves” to describe women who seek to quash FIRs in domestic violence cases.

…And the good news

Protagonists Bellie and Bommon of the Oscar-winning documentary The Elephant Whisperers were felicitated by Tamil Nadu chief minister MK Stalin who presented them with a cheque of Rs 100,000 each and announced a similar award for 91 workers at the state’s two elephant camps at Mudumalai and Annamalai. The CM also announced financial assistance of Rs 9.1 crore to build houses for mahouts and their assistants and another Rs 5 crore to upgrade the camp at Annamalai.

Field notes

Hormonal contraceptive pills for women have been around since the 1960s and gave women the freedom to choose when they want (and if they want) to get pregnant. Now over half a century later, scientists are experimenting with male contraceptives that include pills, gels and implants that would allow men to share contraceptive responsibility. Many are more convenient and fool proof than condoms or easily reversed than vasectomies.

Read more about the brave new frontier of male contraception in National Geographic here.

AROUND THE WORLD

In Texas, a man who says his ex-wife used an abortion pill without his knowledge is suing three women who he claims helped her, invoking the state’s wrongful death act in what may be the first case of its kind, reports Blmoomberg.

In Japan, as companies offer their heftiest wage raises in decades, women in the world’s third-largest economy are hoping that it won’t take as long to close the vast gender gap in pay with women making only around 78% of what men do. Read more in Reuters here.

In Berlin, city authorities have said that women are legally permitted to swim topless in swimming pools. The announcement comes after a 33-year-old woman filed a discrimination complaint against a pool that barred her entry because she was topless.

Were you forwarded this email? Did you stumble upon it online? Sign up here.
That’s it for this week. Do you have a tip or information on gender-related developments that you’d like to share? Write to me at: namita.bhandare@gmail.com.
Produced by Sukoon Wadhawan sukoon.wadhawan@partner.htdigital.in.
Scroll to Top